Example sentences of "teachers ' [noun] in " in BNC.
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1 | While they build schools or refurbish classrooms in one place , they are cutting teachers ' posts in another , despite evident need . |
2 | Alison Kelly worked with some of her students to carry out a minor evaluation of changes in GIST teachers ' attitudes in comparison with a national sample ( Kelly et al . , |
3 | Mr Lang talks about reviving the priority given to literacy and numeracy , about restoring teachers ' standing in the community , about discipline , pride , respect . |
4 | The extent of teachers ' involvement in the review and the extent to which they see the scheme as a professional threat has no significant effect on the attitudes measured by this factor . |
5 | A national teachers ' seminar in 1975 produced an evaluation of the education reforms introduced ten years previously under President Kennedy 's Alliance for Progress . |
6 | Gulliver ( 1979 ) , investigating infant teachers ' assumptions in listening to reading , argued that the ploys that teachers used in helping children read aloud were patterned by their underlying perceptions of reading . |
7 | The present project 's two main aims are , first , to investigate the effectiveness of RAP for enhancing student teachers ' skill in class management/control and concept teaching ; second , to find out in what ways it may be necessary to train teacher training supervisors to use RAP effectively with their students . |
8 | In January it opened 15 centres which will up-date teachers ' skills in maths , science and computer education . |
9 | developing teachers ' skills in consultation and negotiation , on behalf of the pupil , with colleagues across departmental and managerial boundaries ; with parents as partners in their children 's learning ; and , where indicated , with members of other professions across institutional and professional boundaries ( cf DHSS guidelines 1988 , which , ironically , suggest more awareness of what may be achieved through the personal and social education aspects of the school curriculum than their DES counterparts with regard to the forthcoming national curriculum ) . |
10 | The result is a marked advance within ILEA schools in teachers ' skills in relation to assessment as well as movement towards whole school policies on assessment . |
11 | However , this year the Speaker has also been reaching outside his Sacramento stronghold : convening an economic summit in Los Angeles to examine the state 's recession ; pushing laws to reform California 's hated workers'-compensation scheme ; leading a team of legislators to Washington to plead for the state 's interests ; putting himself forward as a mediator in a fractious dispute over teachers ' pay in Los Angeles . |
12 | At the very successful Potential Teachers ' Day in July , 29 students were introduced to Medau at training level and were given background information about the syllabus and course structure . |
13 | However , this assumption is not shared by sociologists of education who have only begun to study teachers and teachers ' work in recent years . |
14 | This chapter , therefore , examines some of the ways in which I conducted this work by focusing on teachers ' appointments and teachers ' work in Bishop McGregor School . |
15 | The contract was drawn up to safeguard the teachers ' rights in the situation . |
16 | A fifteen-day teachers ' strike in September 1989 , supported by other workers , reflected some of these economic and professional concerns , though the Costa Rican teachers ' union is not considered militant . |
17 | Changed and changing perceptions of teachers ' experiences in United Kingdom classrooms in the past two decades . |
18 | One study has analysed and compared parents ' and teachers ' strategies in hearing young children read ( Hannon , Jackson and Weinberger , in press ) . |
19 | A qualified Keep Fit Teachers , she gained the Medau Teachers ' Award in 1968 and for many years was an active member of the Executive committee , serving as the Society 's first Vice-Chairman from 1977 to 1979 . |
20 | Born in 1888 of working-class parents in Belopole , a small Ukrainian town , he had graduated from the Poltava Teachers ' Institute in 1917 with a gold medal . |
21 | A few weeks later , in a speech made to the All-Russian Teachers ' Congress in Moscow on 9 July , Khrushchev made a specific reference to Cuba in this respect . |
22 | There was no significant association between teachers ' years in the profession and any of the attitudes represented by these factors . |
23 | In the same way , all examinations make considerable demands on teachers ' time in terms of involvement in Examination Board work , running examinations in school and subsequently marking them ; but an examination like GCSE , with radically new features , is likely to involve considerably more time over the next few years for teachers to become able and proficient in its procedures . |
24 | We wish to distance ourselves from such inferences , even though naturally we would expect our findings to generate constructive discussion about the effective use of pupils ' and teachers ' time in primary schools . |
25 | This preoccupation with assessment was regarded both as demoralizing and excessively demanding on teachers ' time in 1989 , 1990 and 1991 . |
26 | At Hunan Teachers ' College in Changsha , the situation worsened . |
27 | The systematic analysis of teachers ' needs in relation to professional personal development is becoming widespread as staff appraisal and career review become more structured . |
28 | In the past there has been considerable dispute between teachers and their employers over the teachers ' role in the collecting of dinner money and the supervision of children during the mid-day break . |
29 | The increasing use of diagnostic information and the requirements of public examinations should bring to the fore teachers ' role in assessment in comparison with their somewhat peripheral involvement hitherto . |
30 | The Elton Committee felt that teachers ' authority in this country would be better protected by setting out the fundamental principles governing that authority in statute . |